Eubulides Of Miletus, (born 4th century bc) a member of the Megarian school of philosophy in Athens and renowned as an inventor of logical paradoxes, the most famous of which is “The Liar” (“Does a man who says that he is now lying, speak truly?”). He was a contemporary of Aristotle, whom he attacked, and tradition says that he was a teacher of Demosthenes.

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...have been attributed to them, including the “liar paradox” (someone says that he is lying; is his statement true or false?), the discovery of which has sometimes been credited to Eubulides of Miletus, a pupil of Euclid of Megara. The Megarians also discussed how to define various modal notions and debated the interpretation of conditional propositions.